Zoolander (2001) – DVD Review

Written by: John Hamburg, Drake Sather & Ben Stiller Directed by: Ben Stiller Starring: Ben Stiller, Owen Wilson, Christine Taylor, Will Ferrell, and more celebrity cameos than you can shake a stick at

Features:

Running audio commentary by Stiller, Sather & Hamburg

5 deleted scenes with running audio commentary by Stiller

5 extended scenes with running audio commentary by Stiller

Outtakes

Music video – “Start the Commotion” by the Wiseguys

2 original skits from the ‘VH1/ Vogue Fashion Awards, 1996/97’

Alternate end title sequence

Photo gallery

Released by: ParamountRegion: 1Rating: PG-13Anamorphic: Yeah, bro.

My Advice: Rent It.

Even for the really, really, really good-looking, life can be a trial. Derek Zoolander (Ben Stiller), for example, just lost the Male Model of the Year Award to the new model of the block Hansel (Owen Wilson), three of his model friends barbequed themselves during a gasoline fight, and his Time interview written by Matilda Jeffries (Christine Taylor) depicted him as vain, self-absorbed, and unbelievably stupid. Things look up when the hottest designer around, Mugatu (Will Ferrell), chooses Derek to headline his new “Derelicte” fashion line. But Mugatu has sinister plans for Derek. Can Derek, Hansel, and Matilda foil Mugatu’s evil scheme and still make it to the after party?

The DVD is crammed with special features. I’m surprised I didn’t find a kitchen sink in the thing. The disc has the original Zoolander skits from the VH1/Vogue Fashion Awards, photo galleries of Derek and Hansel for fictitious ads and magazine covers, and even the video for the song “Start the Commotion” which has scenes from the film in it. And those are just a few of the features. One of the features I really liked though was the selection of deleted and extended scenes. With most DVDs, the cut scenes are simply there. But Stiller added commentary to these scenes explaining the inspiration behind them and why they had to be cut.

The commentary for Zoolander itself shows how this movie changed from the first drafts of the script (one discarded idea was for Derek to have taken a smart drug that only activated when he hit his head) to the final edit (a cut subplot had Matilda’s assistant having a sweet and disturbing crush on her). One thing that wasn’t covered that I would have liked Stiller to talk about was what was it like to direct himself. Did he have others give an opinion on his performance or did he trust his own judgment? Still, the flick is fun and silly and worth heading down to the local video store.